On Friday, February 2, 2018 at 10:39:45 PM UTC-10, sanne wrote:
> Am Freitag, 2. Februar 2018 23:11:03 UTC+1 schrieb dsi1:
> > On Friday, February 2, 2018 at 12:06:21 PM UTC-10, sanne wrote:
> > >
> > > Korean gimbap (their version of sushi rolls) often has spam in it.
> > > We haven't combusted yet - neither there nor(i) here. ;-)
> > >
> > > Bye, Sanne.
> >
> > Korean ain't regular people.
>
> Do tell! ;-)
>
> > I once told my wife that Koreans give Spam as presents. She told me
> > that she knows. She used to help her mom pack Cans of Spam to send
> > to their relatives in Korea.
>
> That's a relic from the Korean war and afterwards when the American
> soldiers introduced it to the Koreans. It was something special then
> and is still nowadays.
> "Budae Jigae" may be one of the first Fusion foods there; it uses spam, too.
> And Ramyeon.
>
> > She also taught me about roasting nori over a fire with sesame oil
> > and salt. This style of seaweed has gotten very popular in Hawaii
> > over the last 20 years.
>
> It's a heavenly snack! Readily available, too - and a welcome present
> from Koreans when they visit us.
> You do know maangchi.com ? She's on youtube, too. Tell your wife that
> nickname; she'll have a good laugh.
>
> Bye, Sanne.
Koreans ain't regular people because they don't spontaneously burst into flames when a concoction of rice, Spam, and nori, is placed in front of them. They must have Hawaiian blood in them. I haven't seen anyone serving army stew on this rock. Not yet anyway. Maybe people over here think it might cause them to burst into flames.
http://www.thegardenisland.com/2016/...subi-lives-on/